Equestrian Sports in 2003

Thoroughbred Racing

United States

Thoroughbred horse racing in the U.S., which less than a decade earlier had maintained a hostile stance toward competition from casinos, in 2003 moved closer to forging a partnership with its old adversary. In the eight states that allowed racetracks to have electronic gaming devices, Thoroughbred racing and breeding programs that had been on the brink of extinction were revitalized with an influx of cash from slot-machine revenue. At least a dozen other states were taking “racino” legislation under serious consideration.

The New York Racing Association (NYRA) was the subject of a scathing 64-page report released by New York State Attorney General Eliot Spitzer in June following a three-year investigation that uncovered alleged abuses by employees at NYRA-operated tracks. NYRA president Terry Meyocks resigned his position on September 29.

Funny Cide dominated the racing headlines in the spring by becoming the first New York-bred horse and the first gelding since Clyde Van Dusen in 1929 to win the Kentucky Derby. Almost a week later, scandal was threatened when a controversial photo taken of the finish appeared to show an illegal prodding device in the right hand of winning jockey José Santos. The Churchill Downs board of stewards exonerated Santos of any wrongdoing, however, when they concluded that he was carrying nothing except his whip. Funny Cide scored a convincing victory in the Preakness Stakes two weeks later, but he failed in his bid to become the first Triple Crown winner since Affirmed in 1978 when Empire Maker, which had run second in the Derby and skipped the Preakness, raced to victory in the Belmont Stakes with jockey Jerry D. Bailey on board. Ten Most Wanted, ridden by Pat Day, finished a close second, with Funny Cide third.

The Breeders’ Cup World Thoroughbred Championships, held at Santa Anita Park in Arcadia, Calif., on October 25, proved to be entertaining and eventful. A dead heat was recorded for the first time in the 20-year history of the event when Johar and High Chaparral finished on even terms in the Breeders’ Cup Turf. Julie Krone became the first female jockey to win a nonsteeplechase Breeders’ Cup race when she guided Halfbridled to victory in the Juvenile Fillies. Pleasantly Perfect’s win in the $4 million Classic gave trainer Richard Mandella a record fourth win on the program—he had saddled Halfbridled and High Chaparral as well as Action This Day, the winner in the Juvenile. The Ultra Pick 6 wager on Breeders’ Cup day raised eyebrows for the second straight year when a lone bettor, in Rapid City, S.D., parlayed an $8 wager into the only ticket in the country with all six winners, worth $2.6 million.

Jockey Gary Stevens, who portrayed George (“The Iceman”) Woolf in the 2003 movie Seabiscuit, was nearly killed in a bizarre spill in the Arlington Million, at Arlington Park outside Chicago, on August 16. His mount, Storming Home, veered sharply crossing the finish line, unseating Stevens into the path of oncoming horses. Stewards disqualified Storming Home from victory in the $1 million race, and the win was given to runner-up Sulamani. Stevens suffered a collapsed lung but returned to riding less than three weeks later.

Bobby Frankel set a new single-season North American training record in 2003. Sightseek, which won the Beldame Stakes on October 4 at Belmont Park, was Frankel’s 23rd victory in a Grade I stakes, which broke the record set by D. Wayne Lukas in 1987. On October 31 Frankel surpassed Lukas’s single-season earnings record of $17,842,358. On November 29 at the NYRA’s Aqueduct, Bailey won three stakes races on the program to reach 70 for the year and break Mike Smith’s single-season record of 68. Bailey surpassed his own 2002 North American single-season $19.2 million earnings record by pocketing $23,354,960.

Two legendary jockeys died in 2003—Johnny Longden, who at the time of his retirement in 1966 held the record for wins, and Bill Shoemaker, who had broken Longden’s record in 1970. Thoroughbred owner and breeder Henryk de Kwaitkowski, who had purchased famed Calumet Farm for $17 million at auction in 1992, died at age 79 in March. Laffit Pincay, Jr., who had surpassed Shoemaker as racing’s all-time leading jockey in 1999 and rode a record 9,531 winners during his long career, announced his retirement at the age of 56 on April 29, 2003, nearly two months after he fractured his neck in a spill at Santa Anita.

Equine deaths in 2003 included Spectacular Bid, which succumbed to a heart attack at age 27. He won 26 of 30 career starts during 1978–80, including the 1979 Kentucky Derby and Preakness Stakes, and was undefeated in nine starts as a four-year-old in 1980, the year he was named Horse of the Year and retired with earnings of $2.7 million. Sunny’s Halo, winner of the 1983 Kentucky Derby, was humanely destroyed at age 23.

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